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Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, shown in a December 2015 file photo, gave a personal assurance on Friday, Jan. 29, 2016 that his government would legalize gay marriage if a majority of Australians choose marriage equality in a popular vote.
Atsushi Tomura / Reuters

Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, shown in a December 2015 file photo, gave a personal assurance on Friday, Jan. 29, 2016 that his government would legalize gay marriage if a majority of Australians choose marriage equality in a popular vote.
Atsushi Tomura / Reuters

PM says Australian vote to decide gay marriage

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull says his government would legalize same-sex marriage if majority of citizens vote for it

January 29, 20162:45AM ET

Australia's prime minister gave a personal assurance on Friday that his government would legalize gay marriage if a majority of Australians choose marriage equality in a popular vote.

The center-right government of Australia has promised to hold a plebiscite on the gay marriage question if the government is re-elected in a vote due this year.

But a number of the government's most conservative lawmakers have recently announced that they might vote down gay marriage against the wishes of a majority of Australians.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who supports gay marriage, said his government would "absolutely" follow the result of the plebiscite.

"If the majority of people voting in the plebiscite vote in favor of it, then same-sex marriage will be legalized," Turnbull told Melbourne Radio 3AW on Friday.

The center-left opposition Labor Party supports gay marriage. But the ruling coalition is bitterly divided on the issue.

Australia is seen as lagging behind a growing number of countries on marriage equality, and support for change is rising with an August 2015 poll in Fairfax Media on showing 69 percent of 1,402 respondents in favor of equal marriage rights, up from 57 percent five years ago.

Some Australians in same-sex partnerships married in 2013 in the national capital of Canberra under the provincial government's landmark gay marriage laws. But Australia’s highest court struck down the law and the marriages were annulled less than a week after their celebrations. And while same-sex couples may have civil unions or register their relationships in most states in Australia, the national government does not consider them married.

Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott, a former Roman Catholic trainee priest who opposes gay marriage, had proposed last year that a plebiscite be held after the next election as a way to end the political in-fighting by effectively taking the decision out of lawmakers' hands.

Opponents argue the plebiscite would cost about 160 million Australian dollars ($113 million), and carry no legal weight so the question would still be left to Parliament to decide.

Turnbull had wanted parliament to decide the issue, but after replacing Abbott as prime minister in September he decided to leave that part of government policy unchanged.

Federal plebiscites, which unlike referendums carry no legal weight, have been held only three times since the Australian government was formed in 1901. Two rejected conscription during World War I, and a third in 1977 replaced "God Save the Queen" with "Advance Australia Fair" as the national anthem.